Journal article

Staying on track: a cluster randomized controlled trial of automated reminders aimed at increasing human papillomavirus vaccine completion

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate whether automated reminders increase on-time completion of the three-dose human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine series. METHODS: Ten reproductive health centers enrolled 365 women aged 19-26 to receive dose one of the HPV vaccine. Health centers were matched and randomized so that participants received either routine follow-up (control) or automated reminder messages for vaccine doses two and three (intervention). Intervention participants selected their preferred method of reminders - text- e-mail- phone- private Facebook message- or standard mail. We compared vaccine completion rates between groups over a period of 32 weeks. RESULTS: The reminder system did not increase completion rates- which overall were low at 17.2% in the intervention group and 18.9% in the control group (p=0.881). Exploratory analyses revealed that participants who completed the series on-time were more likely to be older (OR=1.15- 95% CI 1.01-1.31)- report having completed a four-year college degree or more (age-adjusted OR=2.51- 95% CI 1.29-4.90)- and report three or more lifetime sexual partners (age-adjusted OR=3.45- 95% CI 1.20-9.92). CONCLUSIONS: The study intervention did not increase HPV vaccine series completion. Despite great public health interest in HPV vaccine completion and reminder technologies- completion rates remain low.

Languages

  • English

Journal

Vaccine

Volume

21

Type

Journal article

Categories

  • Data

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Added on: 2015-07-02 04:59:22

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Patel et al. - 2014 - Staying on track a cluster randomized controlled trial of automated reminders aimed at increasing human papillomav.pdf

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